And watch out, it seems shop@home is removing posters from all orders but '1' from each account/address/credit card combination. SO they are enforcing a 'one per customer' limit even though NONE WAS PUBLISHED.

If near Mississauga, come visit us at 2410 Dunwin Drive, Unit 5 - your local Ontario LEGO only store - TRUly the largest selection of LEGO aroundAnd out Bricklink store is http://Shop.LastingToys.Com

gfxguy wrote:And, I'm not trying to brag, I make over 6 figures and still can't bring myself to spend that much on LEGO. I guess I have the "cheap gene" that developed when I was a poor college student.

MShiels wrote:And watch out, it seems shop@home is removing posters from all orders but '1' from each account/address/credit card combination. SO they are enforcing a 'one per customer' limit even though NONE WAS PUBLISHED.

Does lego have a right to do this? Did they violate false advertising laws and a breach of contract once the order was placed with the poster in the receipt? I'm contemplating contacting my attorney general about this bait and switch tactic by Lego.3 possible legal avenues: false advertising(householding <> while supplies last , bait and switch, and breach of contract-written/email agreement)

MShiels wrote:And watch out, it seems shop@home is removing posters from all orders but '1' from each account/address/credit card combination. SO they are enforcing a 'one per customer' limit even though NONE WAS PUBLISHED.

Does lego have a right to do this? Did they violate false advertising laws and a breach of contract once the order was placed with the poster in the receipt? I'm contemplating contacting my attorney general about this bait and switch tactic by Lego.3 possible legal avenues: false advertising(householding <> while supplies last , bait and switch, and breach of contract-written/email agreement)

overreact much?

if TLG said 1 per person or 1 per order, they have every right. its up to them how they define what an "order" is. shipping address? credit card number? both? *shrug* and if you were attempting to defraud them by getting more than your share, should lego contact the authorities in your area and arrest you?

go ahead and call the attorney general. see if they don't laugh at your claim and/or hang up on you.

lololololol. This is the second time recently I saw someone talk about getting "legal" with TLG (the other being during the Canadian code fiasco with the Millennium Falcun, and admittedly, the person in that instance was rather level-headed and seemed to be more pondering aloud whether the law was with him as oppose to being hot-headed about it.) But seriously, in instances like this, I just think, "What exactly do you want out of this situation?" Depending on the laws in your area (or of where Lego is doing business out of, I'm not too sure who has jurisdiction here) you aren't really entitled to much more than market value and maybe your legal fees. Unless you represent yourself, and then you're really not terribly likely to win against TLG. So, you people are going to hire a lawyer over, at most, a couple hundred dollars? You'd probably get laughed right out of any lawyers' offices.

So, in the case of this poster, let's say you win "fair market value," and Lego gives you some 50 to 85 bucks (that's what I hear they're going for on eBay right now). What will you probably do with the money? GO BUY MORE LEGO! HAHAHAHAHA. "Hey, Lego company, f* you guys for screwing me. Give me teh moneys!!11 Oh, I get teh moneys?!?! Here, take teh moneys back!!!11"

Or, let's take this all the way. You're only so passionate about this because Lego makes a product that you care about. Okay, I can dig that. But, let's imagine your little class-action suit puts TLG out of business. You'd have a LOT of pissed-off AFOLs. That's funny. Now, I know that both of these situations are so unlikely they may as well be considered statistically impossible, but I just think it's funny whenever someone feels slighted enough to blow their top over something so relatively mundane, and these are the kinds of situations I imagine.

I sure wouldn't bother consulting a lawyer, but I would sure press them hard, on making sure they are clear in communications. They should know by now, being a decent sized business, you gotta treat things openly/fairly. They already enforce X per CUSTOMER limits on sets, so should have done the same on posters. I mean imagine a family trying to get 2 or 3 for the kids, and saying yes, we got the orders in, then having to cut the single poster into 3 pieces. If it was stated up front they would say the kids could share the only single one they were allowed. Just not a real good customer satisfaction idea they did. The silly thing of not stating the limit, means they actualy cost themselves more good will, and probably customer service personnel time, than they could have imagined!!

If near Mississauga, come visit us at 2410 Dunwin Drive, Unit 5 - your local Ontario LEGO only store - TRUly the largest selection of LEGO aroundAnd out Bricklink store is http://Shop.LastingToys.Com

Yeah, but that guy didn't get them, he only got 1. There's a similar thread at bricklink; someone is complaining they made 25 orders and he was pretty mad at only getting 1.

I say kudos to LEGO.

What's odd to me, though, is if they retroactively are removing 10 and 20 posters from people, don't they have enough to give people who ordered later? It seems they are not retroactively adding them to any orders.

Were you asking about the poster or the discount on the UCS Falcon? If you were referring to the poster, you probably won't see that exact same poster from Lego again. It was made for Lego's 10th anniversary (May 2009) of producing SW sets. Unfortunately, if you want one of those, you'll might have to resort to Ebay.

As far as the 25% discount on the UCS Falcon, while unlikely it is still possible. Lego put out a press release and sent out emails around Halloween 2009 that production had stopped on the Falcon. Once the sets in the pipeline sell out, it's gone. Walmart and Amazon are already sold out, TRU currently has 6 and Target has 22. So unless Lego is sitting on a ton or another retailer just wants get rid of them, you may not see another 25% off again. Who knows !?!